Right now things are starting to slow down on my line and im trying to lean more towards a 48hr check, to do this i have to have all kill type sets.In my province we are not allowed to have anything bigger than a 120 on land unless it is dogproof in or above water or 5' off the ground. I am trying mainly to target bobcats and raccoon. Are there many refusals for coon and cats in these dogproof enclosures, the trigger has to set atleast 7 inches from the opening for baited sets and 10" for unscented.Or should i stick to keeping tehm 5' off the ground.I dont think a 120 would be very humane for either of these animals, but its what i have to deal with so people can break the law and let there dogs run around.

to be honest i dont know if there is a truly dog proof coni box.i know people think there is but a baited coni box will take what ever sticks its head in it.what about a lean pole set?that would get your conis up off the ground and allow you to run bigger conis.cats will climb if they want whats up there

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i live and work in this city but am truly alive on this river......tom burns

Tyler Irish, I have a similiar problem as I have a section of line as well as my yard that has lynx but there are also dogs and I have been trying to dogproof some sets. I don't see any way to totally dog proofing them unless you elevate and use a lean pole.

Possumkiller, I can't picture this set could you describe that alittle differant. I use have buckets that are cut and hold 330s for wolverine so I understand that but what are you discribing with the lid?

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when there is shot in the air, there is hope.

If you want to make it dogproof, you need to use a lid with a whole cut in it large enough for a coon to get into. The trap will have to sit farther back in the bucket so it has full range of motion. I don't believe you would be able to target cats with this setup, but you will be able to catch coons and avoid having a dog stick its head in.

I use those square 4 gallon buckets from restaurants or hardware storeCut a 1/4" slot 2" back from the openingThen pop rivet a 20" piece of wood on the top so it overhangs the opening 10-12"Cut a window in the upper 1/2 of the back (bucket bottom) and attach 1/2" rat wire (hardware cloth) also with pop rivets.This allows your baits scent to flow.Cats, coon and fox will enter.Bucket sets was gone into great detail a couple issues ago in T&PC, you get when you belong to your state trapping assn.You may have to use leaning poles, cats, coon and fox will also climb for a meal!Hope this helpsJohn

traprjohn, i asked the DNR about the setup you describe. They say no go, The trap must be set atleast 7-10 inches from the mouth of the opening, an overhang does not give you the required inches between trap and entrance.MinklessinPA: That setup is now a no go, unless I use a 120, and im not even going to try that.Possum:I was wondering how many refusals people got with these dog proof boxes on cats and coon.

Most areas im going to go with elevated sets, but some areas they are not practical, So i would have to go with some other type of set either dog-proof boxes, cages or egg traps.

Dooger: Excellent articles and alot of usefull info, but they are still going for 160's in the mouth of the bucket. I havent been able to find many articles or posts of people who set them farther back.

Tyler I have given up on dog proof cubbies tried for 1 yr but coons passed leaning poles without climbing and refused to enter dog proof cubbies( now this was in early trapping season) some have better luck once they den and come out. I don't bother with coons anymore, people don't want us to 160's then I say let them put up with coon problems!